The Democratic Blind Spot That Wrecked 2024 (NYT Opinion)
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Date: November 10th, 2024 4:09 PM Author: Mainlining The Secret Truths of My Mahchine (It bumps the BOOM thread like a FRIEND Or else it gets the hose )
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/11/10/opinion/trump-harris-presidential-election-midterms.html
By Ezra Klein
Opinion Columnist
The 2022 election went better than Democrats could have hoped. The party picked up governor’s mansions and state legislatures and expanded their Senate majority. It held down losses in the House. The promised red wave never crashed ashore. Perhaps it would have been better if it had.
Looking back, the seeds of Democrats’ 2024 wipeout were planted in the quasi-victory of 2022. Three things happened in the aftermath. The pressure on President Biden not to run for re-election and the possibility of a serious primary challenge if he did run evaporated. Democrats persuaded themselves of a theory of the electorate that proved mistaken. And as a result, the Biden-Harris administration avoided the kind of hard, postdefeat pivot that both the Clinton and Obama administrations were forced to make after the midterm defeats of 1994 and 2010.
In 2020 Democrats had worried over Biden’s age but were comforted, in part, by the soft signals he sent that he would serve only one term. “Look, I view myself as a bridge, not as anything else,” he said in 2020. By mid-2022, as Biden signaled his intention to run again, the party was growing alarmed. In June of that year, The Times interviewed nearly 50 Democratic officials and found that among “nearly all the Democrats interviewed, the president’s age — 79 now, 82 by the time the winner of the 2024 election is inaugurated — is a deep concern about his political viability.”
Nor was the public thrilled about the results the Biden administration was delivering. In October of 2022, amid widespread anger over inflation, the Times/Siena poll found Biden with a 38 percent job approval rating and trailing Trump in a hypothetical rematch.
If Democrats had been wiped out in the midterms, the pressure on Biden to be the transitional figure he’d promised to be would have been immense. If he’d run again despite that pressure, he might have faced serious challengers. But Democrats fared far better than they had expected. The president’s saggy approval rating and the widespread anger at inflation were nowhere to be found in the election results. In their first referendum under Biden, Democrats did much better than they did under Bill Clinton or Obama. Any pressure on Biden to step aside — and any possibility of a real primary challenge — ended.
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In its place, a new theory of the electorate emerged, based on the way Democrats overperformed in contested states, like Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, and underperformed in safe states, like New York and California. There were two coalitions: the MAGA coalition and the anti-MAGA coalition. The anti-MAGA coalition was bigger, but it needed to be activated by the threat of Donald Trump or the Dobbs abortion ruling. A slew of special election victories in 2023 seemed to confirm the theory. Democrats were winning elections they had no business winning, given Biden’s low approval rating and public anger over inflation. But the anti-MAGA coalition’s hatred of Trump had changed the electoral math.
There was a less comforting explanation: Democrats were winning more politically engaged voters by huge margins, Republicans were winning voters with less day-to-day interest in politics. The Democrats’ new coalition was the kind that turned out reliably in midterm and special elections. Perhaps that — not an anti-MAGA cavalry — was behind Democrats’ strong showing. If this theory was right, a high-turnout presidential election might prove dangerous for Democrats because the electorate would fill with the voters who cared little about Trump or Jan. 6 but loathed high prices.
But Democrats largely came to believe the first theory. When I talked to some of Biden’s top political advisers after the midterms, they told me that the president’s approval rating was no longer an electoral indicator worth obsessing over. In a nation this sharply polarized, any president would be unpopular. But that wasn’t a harbinger of electoral doom, as long as the alternative was even more unpopular. Democrats didn’t need to change voters’ minds about Biden so much as they needed to keep reminding them of the chaos and consequences of Trump. The 2024 election, they said, would be about Dobbs and democracy.
This permitted the Biden administration — or what would later be called the Biden-Harris administration — to avoid the pivot previous Democratic presidencies have followed after the midterms. In 1994 and 2010, Democrats suffered shellackings, to use Barack Obama’s memorable term. In each case, the administration took the beating as a signal and refocused itself on the voters it had lost. This led, for Clinton, to triangulation and welfare reform; it led, for Obama, to a sequence of bipartisan budget negotiations and a re-election campaign laser focused on economics.
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But the Biden administration wasn’t forced into that kind of pivot. It wasn’t blind to voter anger over inflation or the border, but it wasn’t stung by the kind of electoral rejection that forces administrations to alienate their core supporters by swinging to the center. There were no bipartisan negotiations over an anti-inflation or deficit reduction package and few highly public and painful efforts to change course. Biden remained preoccupied, understandably, by Ukraine and then Oct. 7 and the war between Israel and Hamas.
The most visible bid for moderation after the midterms was the administration’s endorsement of the Murphy-Lankford border bill. But the Biden administration didn’t engage in that process until the end of 2023, and Biden didn’t endorse the bill until January 2024. Even when the bill failed, Biden didn’t issue his executive actions constricting the asylum process until June of 2024.
Compare that with the Obama administration, which spent years working through splashy bipartisan negotiations through the Simpson-Bowles Committee, with House Speaker John Boehner and through the so-called supercommittee. These largely failed — in the end, deficit reduction was largely driven by the dumb cuts of the sequestration process — but the Obama administration let itself get caught trying again and again and again.
I was no fan of the Obama administration’s turn to deficit reduction. But then, I’m a liberal. The Obama administration didn’t need to win me back. After the disastrous 2010 midterms, it needed to win back voters who believed the administration was listening to me and not to them. It focused relentlessly on that project, even when it infuriated the Democratic base.
I think this dynamic helps explain a political blindness that Democrats developed around Biden. There was always a huge gap between the near reverence for Biden among Washington Democrats and Biden’s weak approval rating. One reason Biden was so beloved among congressional liberals was that, unlike previous Democratic presidencies, his administration didn’t reorient its politics in a way that alienated its base in order to win back disaffected voters. There’s a reason Biden’s staunchest defenders, even after the disastrous presidential debate, were Bernie Sanders and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez.
Instead of focusing on the voters they were losing, Biden and the Democrats kept focusing on the voters they were winning. Biden’s re-election campaign kicked off at Valley Forge with a speech on the threat Trump posed to democracy; Harris’s campaign made its closing argument at the Ellipse, in Washington, where Trump whipped up the mob that stormed the Capitol.
But the electorate of 2024 was not the electorate of 2022. It wasn’t sufficiently motivated by Dobbs and democracy. It’s been an electorally disastrous year for incumbents worldwide, and the depredations of Donald Trump did not make America an exception to the rule. Perhaps if the Democrats had felt the full force of voter fury in the midterms, they would have spent the intervening two years doing everything in their power to quell it or finding a candidate who could answer it. But they didn’t. By the time Harris took over the campaign in July, with barely 100 days left before Election Day, it was too late.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5631548&forum_id=2\u0026mark_id=5304212",#48319550) |
Date: November 10th, 2024 4:34 PM Author: To be fair (Semi-Retarded)
To be fair,
"Wow great explanation, Ezra. Very thorough. You really nailed it, IMO."
(I didn't read a word)
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5631548&forum_id=2\u0026mark_id=5304212",#48319656) |
Date: November 10th, 2024 4:55 PM Author: we love our inept sycophants dont we folks
Not gonna lie, it's pretty funny to watch these lib fags repeatedly lament how people are voting for The Bad Guys because they don't care about "Democracy"
It just gets more and more comical as they lose more and more of the electorate. You can actually imagine this kike writing this exact same shit about how "the American people are rejecting Democracy" after libs get voted out of the federal government to the point where it's like 90/10 GOP
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5631548&forum_id=2\u0026mark_id=5304212",#48319705) |
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Date: November 10th, 2024 5:14 PM Author: Senator Lindsey Graham
the same people who wanted so desperately to protect democracy are now floating theories on X that the election HAD to have been stolen, talking about how the 14th Amendment prohibits orange man from EVEN STEPPING FOOT in the capitol bldg much less serving as president again. in other words, they want to find any reason to stop him from taking office after he won in a landslide in a...democratic election.
and they're the same people who supported continual efforts to impeach him during his first term, then an avalanche of criminal charges and retarded civil bullshit seeking to ruin him.
and then they covered up biden's dementia, and when it surfaced they just shoved a DEI tard to the forefront who'd tried to run but fell on her face.
oh and then they tried to take orange bad man off the ballot in some states, remember that?
these people all cherish democracy above all.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5631548&forum_id=2\u0026mark_id=5304212",#48319766) |
Date: November 10th, 2024 5:16 PM Author: 38 BMI and Age Cat Mom Sobbing on TikTok (gunneratttt)
"There was a less comforting explanation: Democrats were winning more politically engaged voters by huge margins, Republicans were winning voters with less day-to-day interest in politics."
lmao just lmfao. dems have pulled out the stops on eliminating any barrier to voting re: early voting, mail in voting, no ID, etc. specifically because they do best with retards who won't reliably show up to the polls on election day with an ID.
ok (((Ezra))), let's do civics test + in person voting only. how do you think that'll work out for Dems?
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5631548&forum_id=2\u0026mark_id=5304212",#48319771) |
Date: November 10th, 2024 9:10 PM
Author: ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
Ezra stars in this NYT video about the looming disaster.
it's so god damn funny.
(and make sure you see Masha Gessen)
https://x.com/tomselliott/status/1854574816701170066
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5631548&forum_id=2\u0026mark_id=5304212",#48320540) |
Date: November 10th, 2024 9:14 PM Author: you\'re the puppet (Trump Trump Trump)
ITPS
It's the Policies, Stupid.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5631548&forum_id=2\u0026mark_id=5304212",#48320554) |
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